Why Would Demons Need Spaceships?

Dark wide featured image showing a shadowy gray alien figure on the right against a black background, with large white text on the left reading: What Are They Really?

By now many Christians have seen the claim making the rounds online. Supposedly there has been, or may soon be, some kind of government meeting with pastors about UFOs, disclosure, and possible implications for faith and Scripture.

Whenever stories like that begin to spread, they tend to produce the same reaction. Some people become uneasy or fascinated. A Christian should probably do neither.

Even if such a meeting did take place, it would not put the believer in any spiritual crisis or shake the authority of the Bible. And it certainly would not mean the church needs to start taking its cues from rumors, government briefings or internet speculation.

The Christian faith does not stand on secrecy. It stands on revelation and God has already spoken. That is where our footing has to remain.

For many years now, there have been people trying to use UFO claims and strange readings of history to explain away the Bible. These theories may sound impressive at first, but once examined they usually rest on poor scholarship, exaggerated claims, misused evidence and badly distorted Bible interpretation.

That is still true. One of the great temptations in every age is to take whatever sounds mysterious, dress it in scientific language and then use it to push God to the margins. That is why these theories often gain traction. They offer people a thrilling way to talk about the unknown while avoiding the living God who made heaven and earth.

But Scripture begins by settling the central question, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

The Christian does not start with rumors in the sky. He starts with God. The heavens and the earth is His creation. The Bible does not present man as one intelligent race among many equal rivals in the universe. It presents man as uniquely made in God’s image and uniquely accountable to God.

That matters greatly because once you lose that truth, every other truth begins to unravel. Sin is reduced to a defect and then salvation becomes self-improvement. Scripture keeps bringing us back to this reality: the great issue is not whether there are strange things in the heavens. The great issue is that man has sinned against God and stands in need of redemption.

That is why Christians should be very cautious whenever someone says a new discovery will force us to rethink the Bible. Usually that means the Bible has already been set aside in favor of speculation. The faith is then rebuilt around fear and the thrill of hidden knowledge. That spirit is very old.

A great many UFO reports are exaggerations and some are deliberate hoaxes. Some may be spiritual deception, since the devil has always loved counterfeit wonders. Christians do not need to mock every report, but neither should we be naive. The world is full of misread events and overconfident claims.

This is where a calm mind helps.

The Christian does not have to become excited every time the culture points upward. We are allowed to say that the universe is vast and that there may be many things we do not yet understand. But mystery itself is not a threat to biblical faith. In fact, Scripture already teaches that creation is filled with things beyond our grasp. “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever” (Deuteronomy 29:29).

That verse is a great help here. God has not told us everything. He has told us what we need to know for life, salvation, obedience and hope. The church does not live on classified information. The church lives on revealed truth.

And above all, God has spoken finally and clearly in His Son.

Hebrews says, “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets,” and then gives the line that steadies the whole church, “but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son.”

Christianity is not waiting for a government unveiling to complete the story. God’s final and fullest Word is Jesus Christ.

That means whatever may be discovered in the heavens, it cannot outrank Christ. It cannot revise Christ. It cannot sit in judgment on Christ.

The Lord Jesus is not one interesting figure in a crowded universe. He is the eternal Son of God through whom all things were made. He entered this world as a man, lived in perfect obedience, went to the cross for sinners, rose bodily from the grave and now reigns at the Father’s right hand.

The center of Christian faith is not unexplained lights, hidden civilizations, or secret encounters. The center is a crucified and risen Savior. That is where the gospel comes in.

Man’s deepest problem has never been that he lacks information about unusual things in the sky. His deepest problem is sin. We have broken God’s law and have loved darkness rather than light. We stand guilty before the God who made us. And no government disclosure can fix that. No secret meeting can reconcile a sinner to God.

Only Jesus Christ can do that.

At the cross, He bore the wrath sinners deserve. In the resurrection, He conquered death. And now He calls men everywhere to repent and believe the gospel. That remains the great need of the hour. Not inside information about cosmic speculation.

The need is forgiveness, reconciliation, and peace with God through His Son.

So how should a Christian respond to all this?

First, refuse panic. If something is true, it will still be true tomorrow. You do not have to surrender your peace to a headline. Christ still reigns.

Second, refuse gullibility. Claims should be examined carefully. Evidence should be tested. Scripture should be handled rightly. The church should never be impressed by a confident tone alone.

Third, refuse theological drift. The moment a theory starts diminishing the God of Genesis, the Christ of the Gospels, the cross, the resurrection, or the uniqueness of man as God’s image-bearer, it is leading you away from the faith, not deeper into it.

Fourth, keep your eyes on the main thing. The church has a commission from Christ….we preach the gospel, make disciples, worship God and we bury our dead in hope.

We wait for the return of Jesus. Rumors about government meetings do not alter that calling for one second.

In the end, the believer can be steady. Even if the government says more, Christians can listen without fear. Since the church can still open its Bible and say with confidence that God has spoken, Christ has come, Christ has died, Christ has risen, and Christ will come again.

That is enough. Actually, more than enough.

The church does not need a new word from the sky. The church already has the living Word who came down from heaven to save sinners. And because of Him, the Christian can meet every rumor, every claim, and every supposed unveiling with a settled heart and an open Bible.


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